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Sources: Five bidders for Eni's Carbon Capture Business

Two sources said that five bidders had submitted non-binding offers for a minor stake in Eni's carbon capture and storage business.

Sources said that three financial investors, Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP), HitecVision and Macquarie, and two industrial players -- Italy's Snam (PTT Exploration and Public Company Limited) and Thailand's PTT Production Public Company Limited ("PTTEP") -- filed the offers last week.

Eni and GIP have declined to comment.

The Italian group began contacting potential investors last year. It is expected that the contacts will intensify over the next few months, when Eni plans on creating a unit to wrap up projects in various countries, including Italy and Britain.

Eni announced in 2013 that it would sell up to 49 percent of its CCS company to raise funds to finance the growth of the new venture. The valuation of the business was not immediately known.

Eni is selling the satellites as part of a larger strategy to open their capital up to investors and develop dedicated units.

The Italian group already has Plenitude - a unit that produces renewable energy and offers gas and electricity for retail clients - and Enilive – which manages and produces biofuels and a multifuel station network.

CCS technology captures CO2 at the point of emissions and stores it underground.

According to the International Energy Agency, CCS could play a crucial role in meeting global climate goals. Critics say that it could prolong the use of fossils fuels, and they question its commercial viability. Reporting by Francesca Landini, Editing by Keith Weir

(source: Reuters)